Skip the Home Gym and Get Fitter with Less

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Seabees run up a sand dune.
Seabees from Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 3, Det. Morocco, run up a sand dune during a physical training session. (Rebecca Wydeen/U.S. Navy photo)

Venture capitalist John Doerr wasn't talking about service members chasing fitness goals when he said it, but his words hit the mark for any goal-minded person. "Successful entrepreneurs do more than anyone thinks possible, with less than anyone thinks possible."

Replace the word entrepreneur with "a creative person with a goal," and the quote applies to almost any situation. If you are goal-focused, you might find that you can get the creative juices flowing to tackle any challenging problem, both in regular business and in the tactical professions -- including how to train without a gym.

When it comes to gym access, we all are learning how to do more with less. I have not been a member of a gym for more than 25 years, and while I have acquired some equipment, most of what I do requires a pull-up bar, a place to do more calisthenics, a trail or track to run, and a pool or bay in which to swim, depending on availability and weather.

Here is how this applies to us and getting quality workouts with less:

When you are faced with a challenging event, project or feel lost with your current situation, you can change your mentality and focus by finding a quiet place and think -- get creative. By doing that, you will begin to think of problems not as dead ends but as opportunities. That mindset will keep you moving and less bogged down, which is where you need to be -- especially in the military. Engage the thinking and creative part of your brain and start developing ideas.

If your current challenge is no gym access, here's some ideas for shaking things up that are either free or low cost.

  • Add more calisthenics mixed with some form of cardio (walk, run, bike, other)
  • Add jump ropes, walking stairs, hills or soft sand beaches to work the legs and get the heart beating.
  • Add a weight vest to calisthenics to make them harder.·
  • Add a TRX suspension trainer to make calisthenics harder or easier, depending on your needs.
  • Add a few sets of dumbbells and work auxiliary muscles fully with standard exercises that calisthenics alone may not reach as well.
  • Build pull-up bars in your house or back yard. If not a builder, try the StudBar device or a door jamb pull-up bar.
  • Visit a playground with monkey bars; you may even find pull-up bars on your journey. Make it part of your run, add more calisthenics and you have a great workout.
  • Build your own sandbag with a $5 bag of play sand and duct tape.
  • Add in military water jugs or five-gallon buckets full of sand for more weighted devices.
  • Watch workout videos and learn things such as swimming technique, lifting technique, creative TRX exercises and countless calisthenics movements. You can take stationary bike spin classes, yoga classes and so much more that will continue to give ideas or workouts to join in your living room.

If you are interested in how to make this work for you, take a minute to check out Military.com Fitness. This database of fitness ideas, tips and techniques makes it easy for you to do more with less equipment without having to spend thousands of dollars and build a home gym.

Check out the Tactical Fitness Podcast on building your own home gym:

Stew Smith is a former Navy SEAL and fitness author certified as a Strength and Conditioning Specialist (CSCS) with the National Strength and Conditioning Association. Visit his Fitness eBook store if you’re looking to starting a workout program to create a healthy lifestyle. Send your fitness questions to stew@stewsmith.com.

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